audience
even further by stopping people from even listening to albums
on anything other than the most archaic of CD players. It
isn’t unexpected that ‘Casually Dressed’ features
the same sort of irritation – they’re another
member of the ‘rock band signed to a major, major label’ group
(Time Warner); but as part of a trend that simply rejects
many of the new ways of listening to your music, it doesn’t
bode too well as a viable option for the industry.
However,
if you do manage to get it playing, you’ll find that
the album that lies within the tightly protected packaging
is a well crafted, inventive and polished album that may
well live up to the usual hype that that is constantly being
spun by the major labels’ PR guys ‘n gals. It
isn’t anything particularly new to us here in the U.K.
(sounding a lot like Hundred Reasons or Lost Prophets), but
as melodic rock goes it is definitely something to try out,
seeing as it simply wipes the floor with other evanescent
efforts, and contains a hell of a lot more soul than many
of the other Linkin Park wannabes. The album tends to sprawl around
on a fairly similar sounding theme, and a lack of variation
in tempo occasionally makes
the album seem similar throughout (excepting the one acoustic
track, ‘Your Revolution is a Joke’) - but with
deeper inspection, if you can wade through the moat of Mr.
Sheen, the songs are varied enough to keep you stuck to it,
especially when they’re setting good examples to others
with songs like ‘Escape Artists Never Die’. However,
it’s still unlikely to make any converts of simple
rock-heads however: pseudo-rock Darkness fans that spend
most of their time listening to the Sugababes definitely
need not apply.
7.6
Mark Danson
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